Dec 182017
 

 

(Here’s Andy Synn’s annual list of 10 favorite songs from the year that’s nearly ended.)

Oh, you poor, innocent fools… did you really think I was done with you just yet?

Not only do I have a bunch of other reviews, plus another edition of The Synn Report, all set to roll out over the course of this week and the next, but I’ve also got yet another list for you after this one, so you needn’t worry that you’ll be lacking any content to keep you distracted from the grim reality of your lives this festive season.

One quick word of warning – the following list is neither kvlt, krieg, or kool… it’s just ten of the (many, many) songs that lodged themselves deep in my brain over the past twelve months, and which I felt compelled to highlight. Make of that what you will!

 

 

 

A HILL TO DIE UPONGREAT IS ARTEMIS OF THE EPHESIANS

In my “Personal Top Ten” column I specifically noted that the Immortal-esque “….Artemis…” is one of the best songs that A Hill To Die Upon have ever written, and I stand by that assessment now.

It’s got style, it’s got swagger, it’s got riffs up the yin-yang and some perfectly powerful yet nuanced drum work, along with a bevy of steely-eyed hooks – both vocally and musically – designed to embed themselves permanently in your subconscious.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BENIGHTEDMASS GRAVE

The new Benighted album is not only the best they’ve ever produced (and one of the best albums of the year), it also ends on one of the band’s best ever songs, the pugnacious, pugilistic pulveriser “Mass Grave”.

Strafing your eardrums with shellshock-inducing blastbeats, rampaging Death/Grind riffage (tinted with just the slightest hint of blackened belligerence), and a seriously pissed-off and punishing vocal performance form frontman Julien Truchan – plus one absolutely humongous, brutally hooky chorus – “Mass Grave” has enough energy to power a medium-sized city… and enough force to level it, if necessary.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BLACK ANVIL – ULTRA

If there was one track that was always going to make this list, with no hesitation and no questions asked, it would be this one.

Weaving gorgeous swathes of atmosphere and melody into the band’s already multi-layered blackened brew, “Ultra” is just so damn infectious and irresistible, from start to finish, with every single element – from the vehement vocals to the gritty, gripping guitars to the dramatic, driving drums – delivered with such a potent blend of passion and conviction, that it instantly won my heart the very first time I heard it.

And don’t even get me started on that spellbinding, a cappella finale…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BYZANTINEVERSES OF VIOLENCE

It’s probably not that surprising to see a song from The Cicada Tree on my list, seeing as how I declared it to be my favourite album of the year not too long ago, but the question of which song to include wasn’t exactly a simple one, as there were multiple candidates all simultaneously vying for my attention and approbation.

But, in the end, it was the album’s fantastic closer that won the day, as it showcases the band at their very best in every aspect of their sound – from the multiple threads of intertwining and harmonising vocal patterns/styles, to the seamless blending of proggy melody and molten metallic riffage, to the superfluously brilliant songwriting which ensures that not a single second of its nine-minute run-time feels anything less than utterly vital and compelling.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DYSCARNATETRAITORS IN THE PALACE

Quite simply this is just a huge, hellishly infectious tune, which melds the moodiest, doomiest parts of Behemoth and Misery Index into one colossal sequence of chunky, churning riffs and pounding percussion, then laces the whole thing with subtle melodic barbs and utterly monstrous vocal hooks.

All together now:

“TRAITORS IN THE PALACE / NOW MAKE WAY FOR THE KING!”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FIT FOR AN AUTOPSYBLACK MAMMOTH

Despite what you might have read elsewhere, The Great Collapse was not the heaviest or most innovative record released this year… but it was still a damn good album, which found the New Jersey nightmares pushing themselves outside of their comfort zone and expanding their sound in some intriguing new directions.

Yes, the blatant Gojira-worship was occasionally a little too on the nose, and a few of the tracks stuck a little too close to the standard meathead Deathcore template (though that’s not necessarily a bad thing), but when the band struck gold, as they did on “Black Mammoth” – a song possessing not only a potent socio-political message, but also some seriously intense riffage, some subtly proggy undertones, and one truly MASSIVE chorus – you could suddenly see all the potential for FfaA to become a much, much bigger deal.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE MONOLITH DEATHCULTDIE GLOCKE

Way back in May, when we reviewed Versvs1 the bastard part-EP, part-album release from our old friends The Monolith Deathcult, we were given the opportunity to premiere a track of our choosing… and I selected the doomongous “Die Glocke” for that particular honour precisely because it was my favourite.

It also happens to be one of the more uncharacteristic songs the band have ever produced, with no blastbeats, no sudden structural shifts or abrupt changes in direction, and an even more restrained use of the band’s trademark symphonic bombast, instead focussing on a much doomier and much more straightforward approach built around a dense core of titanic, tolling chords and meaty, menacing gutturals, all covered in an overarching atmosphere of deepest, darkest dread.

Plus it throws in a nice bit of Lovecraftian lore part way through, apropos of nothing, which only serves to sweeten the deal. And who doesn’t like that?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NIDINGRON DEAD BODY SHORE

Greatest of Deceivers, the third album by Norse Black/Death/Thrash hybrids Nidingr, is one of my all-time favourite albums – Black Metal or otherwise. And while the follow-up, The High Heat Licks Against Heaven, didn’t quite manage to reach the same dizzying heights overall, there were certainly a number of individual tracks (the poisonously proggy “The Ballad of Hamther”, the creepy blackened trip-hop of “Gleipnir”, the sublime slow-burn of “Ash Yggdrasil”, the cripplingly heavy “Heimdalagaldr”, majestic closer “Naglfar is Loosed”) that really struck a chord with me on an individual level.

But one track stood out even more than the rest, the rampaging “On Dead Body Shore”, with its savage array of immeasurably nasty riffs, utterly malevolent melodies and deliciously demonic hooks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OFERMODTO DARE THE TOWER

I’m more than happy to put my money where my mouth is, and declare this one of the best Black Metal songs of the year… it’s just so fearlessly grim and gritty and gruesomely catchy. It doesn’t pull any punches, or pretend to be any more, or any less, than what it is – a near perfect microcosm of Black Metal in all its visceral, venomous glory.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SYNAPTIKTHE INCREDIBLE MACHINE

Hitting that sweet spot where Evergrey meets Into Eternity, the second album by UK Prog-Metallers Synaptik may not have made it onto my “Great” list (though it certainly was close), but its opening track was an instant shoe-in for one of my favourite tracks of the year.

Mixing intricate, instantly memorable riffage, clever, complex drum work (including some pinpoint precision blastbeats), and a powerhouse vocal performance from singer John Knight (who has some truly amazing pipes, as well as a keen grasp of melody at both its most subtle and its most dramatic), “The Incredible Machine” is the sort of song that revels in its own audacity and energy, and which never fails to deliver the goods, no matter how many times I hear it.

 

 

 

Now I’m not pretending that these songs are any sort of definitive list of the “Best” of 2017… they just happen to be my personal favourites, and ones which I thought I’d draw your attention to, because I love them so much.

As always there were numerous other tracks (including songs by Darkest Hour, Satyricon, The Faceless, and God Dethroned) which almost made the cut, but, ultimately, I think I’m pretty happy with the ten selections you can see here.

Anyway, feel free to let me/us know what you think, whether any of my choices particularly appeal to you, and add recommendations of your own, in the comments below!

 

  15 Responses to “ANDY SYNN’S TOP TEN TRACKS OF 2017”

  1. that Synaptik track is pretty awesome…never heard of those guys before. I hear a strong Nevermore vibe, which given recent events, is hitting me hard.

  2. So much great music. I’ve unfortunately not heard the new A Hill to Die Upon album, but it sounds marvelous.

  3. Have to give these a listen!

    For me my top 10 would probably be this, not ranked:

    * Amenra – A Solitary Reign
    * Loss – All Grows on Tears
    * Misþyrming – Hof
    * Sinmara – Within the Weaves of Infinity
    * Archspire – Involuntary Doppelganger
    * Wolves in the Throne Room – Born from the Serpent’s Eye
    * Oranssi Pazuzu – Värimyrsky
    * Converge – Eve
    * Yellow Eyes – Shrillness in the Heated Grass

  4. Man, now I feel like a moron for skipping the Byz this year. The embedded song is a true gem.

  5. Some of my favorite songs this year:
    Fjoergyn – Lucifer Es/Dinner mit Baal
    Abhorrent Decimation – Granted Indulgence
    Septicflesh – The Third Testament
    Madrost – Eyes of the Deceit/No Future
    Persefone – Living Waves
    Blaze of Perdition – Ashes Remain
    Cormorant – Sentinel
    Dawn of Disease – Beneath the Waters
    Dyscarnate – Nothing Seems Right(I always have the chorus lyric running through my head)
    Xanthochroid – The Sound of a Glinting Blade leading into The Sound which has no Name(Fantastic composition)
    Tombs – Black Sun Horizon/November Wolves
    The Thirteenth Sun – Planes of Creation
    Svart Crown – Khimba Rites

    Just to name a fraction of my favorites.

  6. Can we have a “country of the year”? The demographic that has shaped/influenced metal the most this year?

  7. Byzantine!? Wow, i like these Metal nuts from W. Virginia a whole lot but thought they weren’t “cool”, not that i care, but hey, good call. Great Band that gets no mention ever.

  8. Maybe Hyperbole. I just never see much about them anywhere.

 Leave a Reply

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.